* refactor: multi-channel infrastructure with explicit channel/is_group tracking - Add channels[] array and findChannel() routing in index.ts, replacing hardcoded whatsapp.* calls with channel-agnostic callbacks - Add channel TEXT and is_group INTEGER columns to chats table with COALESCE upsert to protect existing values from null overwrites - is_group defaults to 0 (safe: unknown chats excluded from groups) - WhatsApp passes explicit channel='whatsapp' and isGroup to onChatMetadata - getAvailableGroups filters on is_group instead of JID pattern matching - findChannel logs warnings instead of silently dropping unroutable JIDs - Migration backfills channel/is_group from JID patterns for existing DBs Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: skills engine v0.1 — deterministic skill packages with rerere resolution Three-way merge engine for applying skill packages on top of a core codebase. Skills declare which files they add/modify, and the engine uses git merge-file for conflict detection with git rerere for automatic resolution of previously-seen conflicts. Key components: - apply: three-way merge with backup/rollback safety net - replay: clean-slate replay for uninstall and rebase - update: core version updates with deletion detection - rebase: bake applied skills into base (one-way) - manifest: validation with path traversal protection - resolution-cache: pre-computed rerere resolutions - structured: npm deps, env vars, docker-compose merging - CI: per-skill test matrix with conflict detection 151 unit tests covering merge, rerere, backup, replay, uninstall, update, rebase, structured ops, and edge cases. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com> * feat: add Discord and Telegram skill packages Skill packages for adding Discord and Telegram channels to NanoClaw. Each package includes: - Channel implementation (add/src/channels/) - Three-way merge targets for index.ts, config.ts, routing.test.ts - Intent docs explaining merge invariants - Standalone integration tests - manifest.yaml with dependency/conflict declarations Applied via: npx tsx scripts/apply-skill.ts .claude/skills/add-discord These are inert until applied — no runtime impact. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com> * remove unused docs (skills-system-status, implementation-guide) Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com> --------- Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
6.2 KiB
Add Discord Channel
This skill adds Discord support to NanoClaw using the skills engine for deterministic code changes, then walks through interactive setup.
Phase 1: Pre-flight
Check if already applied
Read .nanoclaw/state.yaml. If discord is in applied_skills, skip to Phase 3 (Setup). The code changes are already in place.
Ask the user
-
Mode: Replace WhatsApp or add alongside it?
- Replace → will set
DISCORD_ONLY=true - Alongside → both channels active (default)
- Replace → will set
-
Do they already have a bot token? If yes, collect it now. If no, we'll create one in Phase 3.
Phase 2: Apply Code Changes
Run the skills engine to apply this skill's code package. The package files are in this directory alongside this SKILL.md.
Initialize skills system (if needed)
If .nanoclaw/ directory doesn't exist yet:
npx tsx scripts/apply-skill.ts --init
Or call initSkillsSystem() from skills-engine/migrate.ts.
Apply the skill
npx tsx scripts/apply-skill.ts .claude/skills/add-discord
This deterministically:
- Adds
src/channels/discord.ts(DiscordChannel class implementing Channel interface) - Adds
src/channels/discord.test.ts(unit tests with discord.js mock) - Three-way merges Discord support into
src/index.ts(multi-channel support, findChannel routing) - Three-way merges Discord config into
src/config.ts(DISCORD_BOT_TOKEN, DISCORD_ONLY exports) - Three-way merges updated routing tests into
src/routing.test.ts - Installs the
discord.jsnpm dependency - Updates
.env.examplewithDISCORD_BOT_TOKENandDISCORD_ONLY - Records the application in
.nanoclaw/state.yaml
If the apply reports merge conflicts, read the intent files:
modify/src/index.ts.intent.md— what changed and invariants for index.tsmodify/src/config.ts.intent.md— what changed for config.ts
Validate code changes
npm test
npm run build
All tests must pass (including the new Discord tests) and build must be clean before proceeding.
Phase 3: Setup
Create Discord Bot (if needed)
If the user doesn't have a bot token, tell them:
I need you to create a Discord bot:
- Go to the Discord Developer Portal
- Click New Application and give it a name (e.g., "Andy Assistant")
- Go to the Bot tab on the left sidebar
- Click Reset Token to generate a new bot token — copy it immediately (you can only see it once)
- Under Privileged Gateway Intents, enable:
- Message Content Intent (required to read message text)
- Server Members Intent (optional, for member display names)
- Go to OAuth2 > URL Generator:
- Scopes: select
bot- Bot Permissions: select
Send Messages,Read Message History,View Channels- Copy the generated URL and open it in your browser to invite the bot to your server
Wait for the user to provide the token.
Configure environment
Add to .env:
DISCORD_BOT_TOKEN=<their-token>
If they chose to replace WhatsApp:
DISCORD_ONLY=true
Sync to container environment:
cp .env data/env/env
The container reads environment from data/env/env, not .env directly.
Build and restart
npm run build
launchctl kickstart -k gui/$(id -u)/com.nanoclaw
Phase 4: Registration
Get Channel ID
Tell the user:
To get the channel ID for registration:
- In Discord, go to User Settings > Advanced > Enable Developer Mode
- Right-click the text channel you want the bot to respond in
- Click Copy Channel ID
The channel ID will be a long number like
1234567890123456.
Wait for the user to provide the channel ID (format: dc:1234567890123456).
Register the channel
Use the IPC register flow or register directly. The channel ID, name, and folder name are needed.
For a main channel (responds to all messages, uses the main folder):
registerGroup("dc:<channel-id>", {
name: "<server-name> #<channel-name>",
folder: "main",
trigger: `@${ASSISTANT_NAME}`,
added_at: new Date().toISOString(),
requiresTrigger: false,
});
For additional channels (trigger-only):
registerGroup("dc:<channel-id>", {
name: "<server-name> #<channel-name>",
folder: "<folder-name>",
trigger: `@${ASSISTANT_NAME}`,
added_at: new Date().toISOString(),
requiresTrigger: true,
});
Phase 5: Verify
Test the connection
Tell the user:
Send a message in your registered Discord channel:
- For main channel: Any message works
- For non-main: @mention the bot in Discord
The bot should respond within a few seconds.
Check logs if needed
tail -f logs/nanoclaw.log
Troubleshooting
Bot not responding
- Check
DISCORD_BOT_TOKENis set in.envAND synced todata/env/env - Check channel is registered:
sqlite3 store/messages.db "SELECT * FROM registered_groups WHERE jid LIKE 'dc:%'" - For non-main channels: message must include trigger pattern (@mention the bot)
- Service is running:
launchctl list | grep nanoclaw - Verify the bot has been invited to the server (check OAuth2 URL was used)
Bot only responds to @mentions
This is the default behavior for non-main channels (requiresTrigger: true). To change:
- Update the registered group's
requiresTriggertofalse - Or register the channel as the main channel
Message Content Intent not enabled
If the bot connects but can't read messages, ensure:
- Go to Discord Developer Portal
- Select your application > Bot tab
- Under Privileged Gateway Intents, enable Message Content Intent
- Restart NanoClaw
Getting Channel ID
If you can't copy the channel ID:
- Ensure Developer Mode is enabled: User Settings > Advanced > Developer Mode
- Right-click the channel name in the server sidebar > Copy Channel ID
After Setup
The Discord bot supports:
- Text messages in registered channels
- Attachment descriptions (images, videos, files shown as placeholders)
- Reply context (shows who the user is replying to)
- @mention translation (Discord
<@botId>→ NanoClaw trigger format) - Message splitting for responses over 2000 characters
- Typing indicators while the agent processes